Taxation Ruling
TR 1999/15
Income tax and fringe benefits tax: taxation consequences of certain motor vehicle lease novation arrangements
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Please note that the PDF version is the authorised version of this ruling.
FOI status:
may be releasedFOI number: I 1020656Contents | Para |
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What this Ruling is about | |
Defintions | |
Previous Rulings | |
Ruling | |
Date of effect | |
Explanations | |
Detailed contents list |
Preamble
The number, subject heading, Class of person/arrangement, Date of effect and Ruling parts of this document are a 'public ruling' for the purposes of Part IVAAA of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and are legally binding on the Commissioner. Taxation Rulings TR 92/1 and TR 97/16 together explain when a Ruling is a public ruling and how it is binding on the Commissioner. |
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling contains the Commissioner's opinion on certain motor vehicle lease novation arrangements. These arrangements involve the novation (or transfer) by an employee to an employer of some of the obligations under a motor vehicle lease. These arrangements are known as partial novations. The Ruling describes the consequences of such arrangements for both non luxury cars and luxury cars. The Ruling does not deal with any Capital Gains Tax consequences of these arrangements.
2. The Ruling should be read in conjunction with Taxation Ruling IT 2509, which also deals with motor vehicle lease novation arrangements.
Class of person/arrangement
3. The class of persons this Ruling applies to is employers and employees who are parties to motor vehicle finance and/or operating lease novation arrangements.
Definitions
4. A novation is a tripartite arrangement whereby the three parties (lessor, lessee and employer) agree to change or transfer all or some of the rights and obligations in a motor vehicle lease entered into between two of the parties.
- Partial novation is an industry expression that describes a novation (transfer) of a finance lease payment obligation. A partial novation may also occur where there exists both a finance lease and a sub-lease. Under a partial novation the obligation to make lease payments is novated to an employer. Instead of the lessee making payments to the lessor, the employer makes these payments. Commonly, partial novation arrangements include an ancillary transaction whereby the lessee also subleases the vehicle to the employer.
- Full novation is a novation (transfer) of all the rights and obligations in a finance lease or in a finance lease and sub-lease arrangement. As a result of a full novation the employer takes over all the rights and responsibilities contained in the original lease.
- A variation on the full novation is an arrangement known as a split full novation whereby the lessee's rights and obligations under a finance lease (except the residual payment obligation) are transferred to an employer.
Previous Rulings
5. Draft Taxation Determination TD 98/D6 was withdrawn on the release of this ruling as a draft Taxation Ruling on 5 May 1999.
Ruling
The effect of novations
Full novations
6. In full novations the lease obligations are transferred to the employer. Accordingly, there are no income tax consequences for the employee during the period when the employer makes the lease payments.
7. The employer in the novated lease is entitled to a deduction for lease expenses where the vehicle is used in the business or provided to an employee as part of a salary packaging arrangement. In the case of a luxury car the deduction is based on an accrual amount and depreciation subject to the luxury car depreciation limit.
8. A car benefit arises under the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA) where the employer is lessee of a car that is provided for the private use of the employee or associate of the employee.
Partial novations
9. There has been some considerable doubt about the tax consequences of partial novations. Where the partial novation occurs in the context of the creation of a sub-lease, the sub-lessor is in receipt of a benefit under that sub-lease and is assessable on the value of that benefit. Where no sub-lease exists no income benefit is derived by the employee.
10. The partial novation can be compared to the split full novation. Both the split full novation and partial novation arrangements seek to achieve a transfer to the employer of the obligation to make the lease payments during the period of the employee's employment. Different contractual expressions are used to achieve this end. In many partial novation documents, however, it is not always clear if there has been a novation of the entire lease or only that part which contains the obligation to make the lease payments. While the intentions of the parties may be a relevant consideration to assist in the interpretation of the agreements, they are not always apparent.
11. In both partial and split full novations the employer obtains the lease payment obligations, either directly from the lessor or under the sub-lease from the employee. While the nature of the legal relationships differ the practical legal obligations are similar.
Partial novations entered into on or before 17 June 1998
12. In view of the commonly understood purpose and intention of these partial lease payment novation arrangements, the Commissioner accepts partial novation arrangements entered into on or before 17 June 1998 as full novations. Any existing sub-lease in these arrangements has no function for tax purposes.
13. Where the sub-lease is ineffective because there has been a full novation or is not present as part of the arrangements, the employee is not assessable on any income under these arrangements.
14. Further, in these circumstances, as the car is provided to the employee or associate, only a car benefit arises under the FBTAA.
Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998
15. Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998 have the following income and fringe benefits tax consequences.
Non-luxury cars
16. The employee is assessable on the benefit received as sub-lessor at the time the lease payment obligations are transferred under a partial novation. The income or benefit is calculated by reference to the value, equivalent to the lease payments, of the consideration received. That consideration is the promise by the employer to make rental payments directly to the financier in lieu of payments to the employee under the sub-lease between the employer and the employee.
17. A deduction is not available to the employee under section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) in non-luxury motor vehicle partial novations where the lease payments are contractually made by the employer directly to the finance provider. In these circumstances, the employee no longer has the contractual obligation for the lease payment liabilities and does not make the payments.
Luxury cars
18. When this novation involves a luxury motor vehicle the employee is the notional owner as sub-lessor in the sub-lease between the employee and the employer for the purpose of Schedule 2E, Division 42A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) (luxury car rules).
19. The employee is assessed on the accrual amount of the notional loan in this luxury motor vehicle novation. The accrual amount is calculated by reference to the consideration for the granting, by the employee to the employer, of the right to possession or use of the motor vehicle. That consideration is equal to the amount of the lease payment obligation transferred to the employer.
20. A deduction is not available to the employee in a luxury motor vehicle partial novation. An employee, as sub-lessee, can claim a deduction only to the extent to which a deduction is allowable to the lessee under other provisions of the Act.
Fringe benefits tax
21. In partial novations a residual benefit may arise under the FBTAA where all that occurs is the transfer to the employer of the lease payment obligations of the employee. A car benefit arises where the employer provides the car for the private use of the employee or associate of the employee.
Division 16D
22. Division 16D has no application to the types of arrangements covered by this Ruling.
Date of effect
23. This Ruling applies to luxury car and non-luxury car partial novation arrangements entered into up to and after 17 June 1998 (the date on which our view of these arrangements was first expressed in Draft Taxation Determination TD 98/D6).
24. This Ruling does not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of a settlement of a dispute agreed to or to any private rulings on arrangements covered by this Ruling that were entered into up to the date of issue of this Ruling (see paragraphs 21 and 22 of Taxation Ruling TR 92/20).
Explanations
The effect of novations
Full novations
25. Full novation arrangements occur where the employee takes out a finance lease for a car. The employee may then sub-lease the car to his/her employer. The finance lease (and sub-lease where one exists) is novated in full to the employer. The employer becomes the lessee and all the rights and obligations of the lease and any sub-lease are transferred to the employer. The finance lease and any sub-lease are rescinded (contractually extinguished) and replaced by a new novated lease arrangement. The employer becomes the lessee for this novation period.
26. In a full novation and a split full novation the lease obligations are transferred to the employer. Accordingly, there are no income tax consequences for the employee during the period when the employer makes the lease payments.
27. The employer becomes the lessee under the novated lease and is entitled to a deduction for lease expenses where the vehicle is used in the business or provided to an employee as part of a salary packaging arrangement. In the case of a luxury car the deduction is based on an accrual amount and depreciation, subject to the luxury car depreciation limit in section 42-80 of the ITAA 1997 (section 57AF of the ITAA 1936).
28. On the happening of a terminating event, such as the payment of the last lease payment under the novated lease or employment termination, a further novation may occur. Under the further novation the employer's subsisting rights and obligations are novated to the employee. The employee becomes lessee and is able to take this lease to another employer.
29. A car benefit arises under Division 2 of the FBTAA in these novations where the employer provides the car for the private use of the employee or associate of the employee.
Partial novations
30. A partial novation is where the employee takes out a finance lease for a car, then enters into a novation of the lease payment obligations which are transferred to the employer. The employee then sub-leases the car to the employer who becomes a sub-lessee. A partial novation may also occur where there is no sub-lease and the novation takes the form of a transfer of the lease payment obligations of the finance lease to the employer. In both cases no direct payments are received by the employee; however, the employer agrees to accept a novation of the finance lease payments obligations. In the sub-lease version, the novation of the lease payments is in lieu of the obligation to pay rent under the sub-lease. The sub-lessee agrees to pay the lease payments direct to the finance provider. The employer is able, by virtue of the rights it acquires as sub-lessee, to make the car available for the private use of the employee. Because the car is provided by the employer it is accepted that a car benefit arises. The arrangements are specified to continue only for so long as the employee is employed or the last lease payment is made. On the cessation of employment, for example, the arrangements are unwound and both the sub-lease and the novation are terminated. In that circumstance the (now ex) employee therefore resumes the role as lessee and the employer has no further responsibility for the vehicle.
31. The taxation outcomes of certain novation arrangements have been known since 1989. However, some of the taxation consequences may have been confused with the intention of previously published advice. This confusion generally revolves around whether or not both the lease and the sub-lease (where one existed) were novated in full. In the advice it was contemplated that the employee would not remain as lessee and not retain part of the original lease conditions. Further, it was not contemplated that the sub-lease would remain in existence.
32. There has been some considerable doubt about the tax consequences of partial novations. Where the partial novation occurs in the context of the creation of a sub-lease, it may be said that the sub-lessor is in receipt of a benefit under that sub-lease and is assessable on the value of that benefit. Where no sub-lease exists, no income benefit is derived by the employee.
33. The creation of the sub-lease calls for an analysis of the nature of the benefit enjoyed by the sub-lessor (the employee). In some arrangements, the sub-lessor foregoes the right to receive payments under the sub-lease in exchange for the employer's agreement to accept the transfer by novation of the lease payment obligations contained in the lease between the financier and the employee. In other documented arrangements no mention is made of sub-lease income. As the sub-lease is designed to mirror the rights and obligations inherent in the finance lease, it is accepted that the sub-lessor has, in fact, foregone lease income equal to the value of the lease payments made by the employer direct to the financier.
34. The partial novation can be compared to a split full novation. Split full novations occur where the finance lease rights and obligations are split between the employer and employee without a sub-lease. The right to use or possession of the motor vehicle and other obligations, for example the lease payment obligations, are novated to the employer. However, the residual value obligation remains with the employee. Thus the expression 'split full novation' came about because what took place was a novation of essentially the full lease notwithstanding that the residual payment obligation remained with the employee.
35. Both the split full novation and partial novation arrangements seek to achieve a transfer to the employer of the obligation to make the lease payments during the period of the employee's employment. Different contractual expressions are used to achieve this end. In many partial novation documents, however, it is not always clear if there has been a novation of the entire lease or only that part which contains the obligation to make the lease payments. While the intentions of the parties may be a relevant consideration to assist in the interpretation of the agreements, they are not always apparent. In both types of novations, the employer ends up with a lease of the vehicle and the lease payment obligations either directly from the lessor or under the sub-lease from the employee. The nature of the legal relationships differs; however, the practical legal obligations are similar.
Partial novations entered into before and on 17 June 1998
36. In view of the commonly understood purpose and intention of these partial lease payment novation arrangements, the Commissioner accepts partial novation arrangements entered into before and on 17 June 1998 as full novations. If a sub-lease exists in these arrangements it has no effect for income tax purposes. Where the sub-lease is ineffective because there has been a full novation or is not present as part of the arrangements, the employee is not assessable on any income under these arrangements.
37. Further, in these circumstances whether or not a sub-lease exists, only a car benefit arises under the FBTAA.
Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998
38. Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998 have the following income and fringe benefits tax consequences.
Non-luxury cars
39. The employee is assessable on the benefit received as sub-lessor (section 21 of the ITAA 1936) at the time the lease payment obligations are transferred under a partial novation. The employee is assessed on the income derived where both the head lease and sub-lease exist (section 25 of the ITAA 1936, section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997). The income or benefit is calculated by reference to the value, equivalent to the lease payments, of the consideration received. That consideration is the promise by the employer to make rental payments directly to the financier in lieu of payment to the employee under the sub-lease between the employer and the employee.
40. Section 8-1 of the ITAA 1997 (subsection 51(1) of the ITAA 1936) does not allow a deduction to the employee for lease payments made by the employer to the finance company in a partial novation, as no expense has been incurred or paid by the employee. In these novations, the employer enters into a novation where it makes the lease payments direct to the finance provider. The employee no longer has the legal obligation to make the lease payments. Likewise, as the expense is not incurred by the employee, section 51AF of the ITAA 1936 has no application.
Luxury cars
41. The leased luxury car rules in Schedule 2E, Division 42A of the ITAA 1936 apply to certain partial novations where the employee enters into a sub-lease with his/her employer. As the rules apply to sub-leases, they deem the employee and employer to have entered into a notional sale and acquisition transaction. On the grant of the sub-lease the employee, as sub-lessor, is taken to have made a loan to the employer as sub-lessee. Subdivision 42A-B assesses the employee on the accrual income as a result of this loan.
42. However, in these partial novations a deduction is not available to the employee as lessee because the lease payments are made by the employer. Under these rules the lessee is entitled to a deduction for accrual amounts only to the extent that the lease payments, apart from Division 42A, are deductible. The employer makes the lease payments directly to the finance provider. In these circumstances, as section 8-1 of the ITAA 1997 does not allow a deduction, no deduction is available to the employee under subsection 42A-50(3) of the ITAA 1936.
Alternative view - partial novations
43. An alternative view on partial novations suggests that the employee has no entitlement to receive sub-lease rentals from the employer. There is no entitlement because the arrangements never provided for the employer to make sub-lease rentals to the employee, or because the employee has foregone the right to such rentals as part of the lease payment novation arrangement. Thus, the making of the lease payments by the employer to the finance company is in satisfaction of a legal obligation novated to the employer, not an obligation of the employee.
44. We do not accept this alternative view if the right to use the vehicle in this novation is transferred under the sub-lease, as consideration will usually be given in return. In our view, the employer has entered into a contract with the finance company to make lease payments. The transfer of this obligation is part of the tripartite agreement between finance company, employer and employee. Part of the agreement involves the employee agreeing to sub-lease the vehicle to the employer. The circumstances of the agreement indicate that consideration for entering into the sub-lease is the contract whereby the employer makes the rental payments. The value of the consideration is equal to the value of that obligation, which, in this case, equals the amount of the lease payments payable under that contract. If, in substance, there is consideration for the sub-lease, moving from employer to employee, this indicates that a benefit is enjoyed by the employee. We consider that, in the context of an employer/employee relationship, the benefit represents income derived by the employee.
Alternative view - luxury cars
45. In relation specifically to luxury cars, an alternative view suggests that, as there are no 'lease payments' in respect of the sub-lease, there can be no 'implicit interest rate' and no 'accrual amount' that could be included in the employee's assessable income under section 42A-35.
46. We do not consider this to be the case. The sub-lease has been entered into as a direct result of the novation of the payment obligations. The transfer of those obligations is, therefore, the 'other consideration', the existence of which satisfies the definition of 'lease' (section 42A-115). Although the sub-lessor has not directly received the regular monthly payment, it has enjoyed the benefit of that payment being made. Therefore, the transfer of the obligation is 'other consideration' received by the sub-lessor. We consider that 'other consideration' is the value of the contract entered into by the employer to meet the lease payment obligations, which equates to the lease payment paid or payable by the employer and is the accrual amounts assessable to the employee as sub-lessor in the sub-lease.
Fringe benefits tax
47. A residual benefit or a car benefit arises under the FBTAA in partial novation arrangements. A residual benefit arises where all that occurs is the transfer of the lease payment obligation, as we consider that this transfer is in respect of employment. These residual fringe benefits are treated as being received during the period the employer makes the lease payments. A car benefit arises where the employer provides the motor vehicle for the private use of the employee or associate of the employee.
Division 16D
48. Division 16D is designed to prevent transfers of tax benefits in arrangements involving exempt public bodies. Division 16D has no application to the types of arrangements covered by this Ruling.
Detailed contents list
49. Below is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
Paragraph | |
---|---|
What this Ruling is about | 1 |
Class of person/arrangement | 3 |
Definitions | 4 |
Previous Rulings | 5 |
Ruling | 6 |
The effect of novations | 6 |
Full novations | 6 |
Partial novations | 9 |
Partial novations entered into before and on 17 June 1998 | 12 |
Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998 | 15 |
Non-luxury cars | 16 |
Luxury cars | 18 |
Fringe benefits tax | 21 |
Division 16D | 22 |
Date of effect | 23 |
Explanations | 25 |
The effect of novations | 25 |
Full novations | 25 |
Partial novations | 30 |
Partial novations entered into before and on 17 June 1998 | 36 |
Partial novations entered into after 17 June 1998 | 38 |
Non-luxury cars | 39 |
Luxury cars | 41 |
Alternative view - partial novations | 43 |
Alternative view - luxury cars | 45 |
Fringe benefits tax | 47 |
Division 16D | 48 |
Commissioner of Taxation
17 November 1999
Previously released as TR 1999/D5
References
ATO references:
NO 98/607-1; 98/6903-4; 98/9533-7
Related Rulings/Determinations:
IT 2509
TD 95/63
TD 98/D6
Subject References:
FBT motor vehicle
lease financing
lease residual values
luxury vehicles
novation
residual fringe benefits
sub-leasing
termination of leases
vehicle leasing and hire
Legislative References:
ITAA36 21
ITAA36 25
ITAA36 25
ITAA36 51(1)
ITAA36 57AF
ITAA36 Sched 2E, Div 42A
ITAA36 Sched 2E, Subdiv 42A-B
ITAA36 42A-35
ITAA36 42A-50(3)
ITAA36 42A-115
ITAA36 Div 16D
ITAA97 6-5
ITAA97 8-1
ITAA97 42-80
FBTAA Div 2